Moody's says Eurozone crisis conditions place all member
state credit ratings at risk.

It warned 87 European banks to expect downgrades. Moreover,
Fitch revised America's debt outlook to negative. Nonetheless, its AAA
rating is unchanged. For how long is another issue.

At the same time, Italy's La Stampa said IMF intervention
will rescue the country. No source was given, and Il Sole 24 Ore, Italy's
Financial Times, didn't report it. It makes the claim all the more suspect.

IMF's funding capacity gives it $387 billion to contribute.
It can also raise another $250 billion from willing contributor countries
and has other tools.

At issue is will IMF use all its firepower for Italy?
Will member states lend it more? Will bilateral loans be sought from countries
like China, and/or will the European Central Bank (ECB) supply additional
funding?

Two Financial Times articles appealed to Germany to save
Europe and Italians to be patriotic and buy debt.

Imagine asking Italian workers to rescue the country
that sold them out. Imagine asking Germany's $3.5 trillion economy to rescue
other Eurozone ones with a combined $9 trillion GDP.

It's high time solutions accepted reality. Europe's monetary
union failed. Combining 17 dissimilar economies under one system was doomed
from day one. It was just a matter of time and circumstances. They've now
arrived.

The main issue is will anything do more than buy time?
Adding more debt compounds today's crisis. Rising sovereign debt bond yields
say so. So do credit rating cuts on Portugal, Belgium and Hungary with
more coming.

Others say breaking up is an idea whose time has come.
It's hard to do, but bad unions are worse. Doomsday scenarios are mentioned,
including separating strong countries from weaker ones. Historically, monetary
and fiscal union succeeded only in America.

Contagion is spreading everywhere. It hit Greece two
years ago, then Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy.

Spain's economy is double the size of Greece, Ireland
and Portugal combined. It's mortgage, commercial loans, and other debt
can bankrupt Europe. Its impact would affect nations globally. It's running
out of time. It's heading rapidly for default.

Its unemployment rate is 23%. Around half of all youths
can't find work. A million or more people may lose homes, the equivalent
of seven million in America. Its income inequality is the highest since
the EU's Eurostat (its official statistics agency) began analyzing income
distribution in 1995.

Expect Spain's new right-wing Popular Party (PP) to pass
stiffer austerity measures. As a result, anger may explode more than already.
Spain's a power keg. New Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy wants all Spaniards
working together. Punished workers may take another route.

Moreover, in one month, Spain's 3-month sovereign yields
doubled to over 5%. Its new government won't fare better than previous
ones. Names and faces may change, but problems remain and grow. If Spain
defaults, it's too big to save. So is Italy, and, of course, America dwarfs
them all if it falls.

Everywhere, especially in troubled sovereigns, governments
spend all their resources. They're borrowing all they can get internally
and abroad. Push is rapidly reaching shove. A day of reckoning too onerous
to manage approaches.

Funding holes for European banks are deepening. The Financial
Times said they managed to roll over just $413 billion of the $654 billion
due this year. As a result, they've got a huge $241 billion funding gap.
In 2012, $720 billion in debt comes due.

Europe's banking sector deleveraging problem grows greater
than they're able to handle. The FT says disposal assets on their balance
sheets total $3.3 trillion in the next few years. Who has pockets deep
enough to absorb it?

America's in greater trouble than people realize because
of extreme speculative excess. Toxic derivatives impose crushing burdens.
The Comptroller of the Currency estimates banks held $176 trillion of them
at the height of the 2008 debt crisis. Today, US banks hold $249 trillion,
41% more.

Expect international creditors to balk. Borrowing will
get tougher. Economic decline will follow. A burgeoning new debt crisis
will dwarf 2008. Its effects will spread globally.

Progressive Radio News Hour regular Bob Chapman believes
"Europe still does not have a longer-term structural solution to its
debt crisis and none is in the offing."

The Eurozone's crisis is undermining the entire continent.
It has global effects. Worse yet, he learned, "the Bundesbank usually
holds back bonds for market making operations." It only sold about
half its latest issue. "If the crisis continues to deepen, Germany
and the other eurozone nations will have to reexamine where they are headed."

Eurozone 10-year debt costs close to 7%, the highest
level since the euro's creation. The 2% spread between France and Germany's
unprecedented. Bond markets can't function without ECB help. Sovereign
government debt is unmanageable. Increasing it makes it worse.

Italy's largest bank, Unibank, has $51 billion to refinance.
Its bond yields now yield over 10%. Only the ECB can bail them out like
the Fed does for Wall Street.

Besides what Eurozone countries have to refinance next
year, banks have to roll $720 billion of their own at high rates. Moreover,
troubled sovereigns need around $6 trillion to avoid default. Solvent countries
can't provide it without going broke. Neither can the Fed, ECB or IMF.

Capital flight is also an issue. In 2011, Greek banks
lost 20% of their deposits. Will Italian and Spanish ones be next? Smart
money says so. World leaders grope for solutions. Good ones aren't being
chosen "The situation is unsustainable," says Chapman.

If troubled Eurozone sovereigns default, or just Italy
and/or Spain, "US banks cannot possibly stay solvent." Knock-on
contagion will crush them. All 27 EU nations are at risk. So are others
globally. "This as we predicted has no solution."

Worsening conditions assure damned if you do or don't
outcomes. Ordinary people will be hurt most, including in stronger nations
like Germany. End game trouble's approaching at a faster clip.

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.

Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive
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